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Effective_Email_&_Versed_Voicemail
| Effective Email & Versed Voicemail
Time management consultant Stephen Young claims that the average
time consumed by an unplanned telephone call is 12 minutes,
verses 7 minutes for a planned call. This represents five-minute
savings every time you jot down some notes before dialing a
number.
My average client receives about 45 emails and 15 voicemails a
day. But the effectiveness of usage is what determines our
efficiency. Here's some tips to help increase your personal
performance and that of your team:
Sending messages Be specific about your subject. The subject
line is a great tool to communicate
but so often overlooked. For
example, 'October 31 Sales Meeting Agenda'. In your voicemail,
let the person know very early in the message why you are
calling and what you need. For example, 'I'm calling because I
need your input on the Jones Project before I can complete the
report due Monday'.
Be specific in your first sentence. For email, the first
sentence should answer the 'who, what, why, where and when' for
the recipient. With voicemail, using a list helps prevent phone
tag, so write down your key points before picking up the phone.
In both cases include timelines or deadlines. For example, 'I
need you to review and approve the attached budget by 4PM
Friday'. Be selective about distribution. When it comes to
emails, try to copy only those individuals directly affected by
the content. Copying or forwarding information indiscriminately
wastes the recipient's time as well as your own.
Retrieving messages Retrieval frequency. Generally speaking I
recommend picking up messages 3-4 times a day. However, the
number of times a day you retrieve messages depends on the type
of job you have and the circumstances surrounding your work. If
you know there is an issue, contract or deadline looming you may
end up checking more frequently on that day.
Filter by person. If you are consistently copied or blind copied
on emails, they will probably have a lower priority than ones
written specifically to you. Save them in a digital Folder
labeled 'cc/bc' and read them at a later time. If they
consistently fail to provide information you need, contact the
sender and request removal of your name from the distribution
list.
Maintenance Treat your email inbox as you would you paper inbox.
Leaving information in an inbox just clutters up the system and
promotes delayed decision making (aka procrastination).
Establish electronic file folders and after reading the message,
either file or delete it.
These are just a few tips, but the single most important thing
to remember is to develop an email and voicemail strategy, share
it with the team and encourage everyone to stick to use!
Copyright 2001 Cynthia Kyriazis. All rights reserved.
About the author:
Cynthia Kyriazis is an organizing and time management
consultant, trainer, speaker, coach and author.Organize it, a
division of Productivity Partners, Inc. is an organizational
training firm that serves Fortune 500 clients. since. She
currently serves as Secretary on the Board of Directors for the
National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO), and is
member of the National Speakers Association (NSA).
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